Creepy, but not dangerous creatures of rural Mexico
If you live in rural Mexico or occasionally pass the night in a rustic cabin or campsite, you are bound to run into creeping creatures that you may never have seen back where you grew up.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
If you live in rural Mexico or occasionally pass the night in a rustic cabin or campsite, you are bound to run into creeping creatures that you may never have seen back where you grew up.
Every year near the end of the rainy season, I do my best to urge people who live in Guadalajara and its environs to head for El Cerro del Colli –
The Primavera Forest’s Río Caliente is one of Jalisco’s most popular natural phenomena.
A few years ago, I came upon the headquarters of Earthbox Mexico hidden away on a quiet, shady street in Guadalajara’s Colonia Seattle.
If you are like most people, you have probably never had a good eyeball to eyeball look at even one bat in your entire life.
“Outdoors in Western Mexico 3” is a collection of 25 sites where you can escape the hustle and bustle of the big city and enjoy the rich biodiversity and geodiversity of Western Mexico.
El Río Seco is a beautiful, ever-changing canyon that will please hikers of all abilities.